
@article{ref1,
title="Scrubs addressing the firearm epidemic: a novel multidisciplinary elective for preclinical students",
journal="Academic medicine",
year="2021",
author="Joshi, Mihir and Schwartz, Hope E. M. and Teherani, Arianne and Fahimi, Jahan",
volume="96",
number="11S",
pages="S190-S190",
abstract="<p>In the United States, firearm-related injuries claim over 100 lives daily. 1 Lately, physicians have taken a leading role in advocating for public health strategies, policy change, and increased research funding to address the firearm epidemic. 2 However, rates of physician counseling on firearm safety remain low, with lack of knowledge a known barrier. 3 Currently, few institutions offer a formal curriculum on the firearm epidemic. 4 We developed and evaluated an elective curriculum on firearm injury, violence, and the role of health care providers in preventing and addressing this epidemic.  We developed an 8-week curriculum using educational priorities determined by a panel of national experts. Eight content-area experts from across the United States led the following sessions: Intro to Firearm Violence in the United States; Physician and Community Advocacy; Public Health Approach to Gun Violence; Preventing Mass Shootings and Targeted Violence; Trauma Teams and Procedures; Suicide and Firearm Counseling; Firearm Research and Physician Advocacy; and Survivor Panel Within a Hospital-Based Violence Intervention Program. The course was delivered via Zoom in Fall 2020. Our evaluation used a mixed-methods approach: developing and disseminating a pre–post quantitative survey to assess course impact on knowledge and self-efficacy by priority and conducting a postcourse focus group. Quantitative survey questions used 1–5 Likert scale responses and were analyzed with unpaired t tests. Qualitative results were grouped by theme using independent inductive thematic analysis by 2 investigators ...</p> <p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="1040-2446",
doi="10.1097/ACM.0000000000004313",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/ACM.0000000000004313"
}